He Did Not Ask


Pool of Siloam

Pool of Siloam (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

He did not ask.  The question never crossed his mind.   He had never seen red, let alone to consider the subtle difference between red and orange.  Dirt had no color at all.  And, beyond the reach of his fingers, the world was filled with utterly ghostly challenges.  Textured blackness was all he knew.  Noise and smell were the only possible warnings before something unknown drew near.  Living in the night with no light to guide his feet, who had testified the impossible possible?

He did not ask.  He was simply the subject of debate between the Lord Jesus and His disciples.  “Rabbi, who sinned, this man or his parents, that he was born blind?”  How could the man know he had been born blind so that this conversation would find a suitable object for a lesson?

He did not ask.  Why those things had happened that morning; those things which brought him to that square foot of ground at just that moment?  There was no need to question anything.  But something was about to change forever.

He did not ask.  Yet someone plastered mud on the man’s eyes!  Of all the humiliating things he has endured.  Now he was the object of an art class.  Had he known he was to become a model this morning he might have presented a bit of persona different.

He did not ask.  But he was told to go wash in the pool of Siloam.  “So the man went and washed, and came home seeing.”

He did not ask for the reaction from his parents, or the subsequent verbal thrashing from the Jews.  He did not ask to be able to see their faces, nor to be quantified a liar.  And he did not ask that he should be thrown out of the temple that day.

He did not ask to be able to walk by himself in places before forbidden.  But now he did.  I wonder if he struggled to stay awake that night; afraid to close his eyes and see nothing but darkness again.  But surely sleep came, just as it had every night before.

He did not ask.  But the morning brought confirmation to a dream he had last night.  Eyelids flung open as soon as the mind brought him from dreams.  Breath filled his lungs with explosive inhale.  And this without his will.  “It was not a dream!”

He did not ask for time.  Who asks for time to come?  Most of us simply endure the next moment.  Time, however, had a different effect on this man than it does for most.  From that day and for years to come, that man lived in colors, shapes, textures seen, and faces recorded.  But the days and years ticked by without restraint.  I do not think that man ever regarded his eyes as people do who have always seen.  Even as old age came to take away what he did not ask for, there was the beauty of fuzzy objects to enjoy.  In the end death took away the gift.  But what need had he of those amazing little marbles then?

He did not ask.  He had no idea of what was coming.  Brilliance surrounds him now.  Colors, living colors dance through perfect eyes.  He did not ask through all those remaining years.  For who could know what he was about to see, even as death came to take back the colors and shapes.

He did not ask to be an object lesson.  For eternity, however, he will be an object lesson of the majesty of the God who caused him to be born blind.  And we should not doubt that he will enjoy his status in this regard.  What remains within Promise is more lovely than the colors and shapes this man saw without asking.

We did not ask.  For we did not know we were in need.  Wretched, pitiful, poor, blind and naked we are.  Who has known to ask when there was no question?  “Here I am!  I stand at the door and knock.  If anyone hears my voice and opens the door, I will come in and eat with him, and he with me.”

We did not ask.  But we were born in our own circumstances.  Who asks for mud?  Who craves to be “sent”?   Who has come away from Siloam healed for the Glory of God the Father?  I remember one more time when 10 were sent.  Only one re-appeared to praise God.  And I ask, “Who am I?”

I did not ask.  I did not dare approach, even in prayer.  Just when I thought I would die that Death, He came to deliver me.  And these words, all together in this place of testimony, praise the One who set me free.  This story has testified, there is a freedom yet to come which I cannot ask for.  How can I know what to ask that He hasn’t already prepared beyond my knowledge?  He will forever be first.  And we will forever be those who receive with praise, dedication and thanks.

Billions have not thought to ask.  Yet they received God’s generous gift of eternal life.  Do you dare hope for something you have never thought to ask?  Here you are reading these words.  Do you dare ask for what you do not know?  “Now to Him who is able to do immeasurably more than all we ask or imagine, according to His power that is at work within us, to Him be glory in the church and in Christ Jesus throughout all generations, for ever and ever!  Amen.”  Isn’t that what is written?

No one asked.  But He has prepared this place of testing for His own Glory.  “For judgment I have come into this world, so that the blind will see and those who see will become blind.”   Have you ever thought that the entire world was created for the sake of judgment?  What judgment could provoke all of creation?  Think about it.  And He does not ask too much of us.  For at His return, His reward is in His hand.

“No eye has seen,

No ear has heard,

No mind has conceived

What God has prepared for

Those who love Him”

We did not ask, but:  “God said, ‘Let us make man in our image, in our likeness, and let them rule over the fish of the sea and the birds of the air, over the livestock, over all the earth, and over all the creatures that move along the ground.’”  “God saw all that He had made, and it was very good.”  He has answered even before we were created!

Glory to the One who lives forever!

Thoughts from Isolation


Isolation Lake

Isolation Lake (Photo credit: .Bala)

Thoughts from Isolation

The following thoughts were formed as I took a mandatory 34 hour break.  I sat behind a store taking care of cleanup, paperwork, remaining clean before the Lord (This might include: some Bible reading, prayer, reflection, and dedication to making this opportunity as valuable as possible), and waiting patiently in 95 degree heat (only running the engine to keep electricity available to the laptop).

Why do I mention the circumstances of this encounter with isolation?  I present the environment so that the reader can appreciate the moment of conception.  There are times when such things are conceived under pleasant circumstances.  But I believe, whole heartedly, that there are also questions and answers that cannot be gained by comfort.  Is this one of those times?  I have no idea.  I was given a bag with seeds inside.  Let’s see what grows.

I know I am blessed to endure these times of isolated reflection.  I hope, with all my heart, that these thoughts initiate something “good” within the mind of the reader.  I have kept them short (if possible) so that you can fill in the blanks yourself.  The sub points are added as I retrieved answers from the Lord.  These answers are to me, though they might provide a bit of direction to others.

I believe the format will help in the way of comment.  How I look forward to hearing what you have to say about these things.  We are all trying to come to conclusions about certain issues.  And it is a sure bet that many of you have answers to these things I have not even questioned before, and cannot gain without you.

By His Grace, I present a day of contemplative isolation to my brothers, sisters, and future siblings.

  1. Do not crave peace.  Rather crave that rebuke against your selfish nature so that you can prosper under the law of God.  (This reflection was from reading Isaiah 53.  How the Lord caused His Son to become eternally powerful through suffering and obedience.)
    1. The craving of the heart reveals the dedication held highest.
    2. The rebuke takes on an entirely different texture to the one who admires it.
    3. Sit and wait for the Lord.  He has brought the entire creation and heaven to this moment.  Do you really think He can’t bring you to where He wants you to be?
      1. He is not constrained by time.
      2. He is not constrained by resources.
      3. He knows where you will be in 30 years as well as where you are right now.
      4. What does perfection look like?  Who has been privy to the Throne of God?  Assume you have not attained perfection and submit to learning through experience.
      5. We do not contain what is perfect.  Perfect contains us.
        1. “In Him we live, move and have our being.”
        2. Men say there is no God.  They point to the chaos around them and measure His power by what they see. They perceive such chaos as to prove He does not exist as an all knowing, all sustaining being.  I say there is a God.  How else is all this chaos not destroying itself?  By all reason, such chaos should have utterly voided this planet of life centuries ago.  He sustains life even in the midst of utter rebellion, chaotic behavior, and decay.
          1. How great is the power of God?
          2. What marvelous purpose has He in mind to have created this place of testing?
          3. If this place was perfectly tempting enough to test the Son of God, what is to be said of those who also overcome by the power of the Holy Spirit?
          4. Can man really learn what is purely good on his own?
            1. If he learned something memory would cause a fading.  Was it pure good then?
            2. What will happen to what is learned when another, and different, set of circumstances appear to challenge that slice of knowledge?
            3. Understanding the true nature of God by observing phenomena on earth is like exclusively studying shadows to examine the Sun.  The resultant assumptions would most certainly fall short.
            4. Pride of ownership cannot be pure for a creature who does not own anything.
              1. God has created all that is.  Everything belongs to Him to do with as He sees fit.
              2. Man can only use or manipulate what has been given to him.
              3. Where then is ownership by man?
              4. It is only between men that anyone can say he owns anything.
              5. Death and circumstances will surely divide what is owned with other’s hands.
              6. I am parked near a freeway exit.  I hear people blare their horn at others.
                1. What are they saying?
                2. Does what they are saying matter?
                3. Where are they going that they can despise others so completely?
                4. Is rude part of their daily prescription for life?
                5. Where is patience?
                6. Where is mercy?
                7. Where is understanding?
                8. Are patience, mercy and understanding only words they have heard somewhere?
                9. And what of my perception of them?  Am I only barking words in my heart?

i.      Where are patience, mercy and understanding within me?

  1. The question for now is, “What are we that God would go to such pains to deliver into eternity a people scathed by sin and bought by pure sacrifice and obedience?
    1. The question we look forward to answering is what will be the state of affairs for such people?
    2. While some people ponder the very existence of a God, His people ponder His promises.

i.      What an amazing divide between the saved and the lost.  The living and the dead.

  1. I do certain “right” things because I have learned there is a cost to “wrong” that I cannot afford (or am no longer willing to afford).  But where is the learning that simply reads what God has said and puts it into practice without rebuke?
    1. Is it the same for everyone else?
    2. I admit that I am neither a Jew, nor was I born into a family which taught godly behavior from my youth.

i.      Thus the saying I have come to own is come home to roost:

  1. “When you are done doing what you do, you will have done your best.  If you could have done better, it would have been done.”
  2. This would mark the difference between a “righteous man” and a sinner being transformed by the Love of God in Christ Jesus.

i.      Though both are singly justified by the Lord Himself, one learns by blessing what the other learns by rebuke.

ii.      What matters most is that we are:

  1. Sheltered under the mercy of God.
  2. Being transformed at that same mercy.
  3. I often ponder those who are not saved.   They do not recognize the Lordship of Jesus in their life.  They even cast aspersions on the Lord and His people.
    1. Why are they not aware of the Lord’s Glory that was given to Him by the eternal creator Himself?
    2. Why do they not care when they are presented with the warnings against God’s enemies?
    3. Why is there not even a hint of concern in the majority of people?
    4. What will become of them?

i.      As Peter had said, “If it is hard for the righteous to be saved, what will happen to the ungodly and the sinner.”  Indeed, what will happen to them?

  1. We hear of vague words like hell, eternal torment, destruction, death, and the like.  But what does that actually look like when there is no longer any recourse?
    1. We hope, even now that we have reached the end of a certain difficulty.  There will be no end to that difficulty.
  2. I am even more aghast at Israelites who don’t believe in God.  Their birth follows a direct line from those who witnessed the sea open for them.  Amazing that generations have wandered so very far from those initial witnesses.

i.      This is proof that a name means nothing in the way of salvation.  Even calling yourself a Christian means nothing if, indeed, you are not a Christian.

ii.      Just as this is true, calling yourself an unbeliever is not the fullness of the sum of your life.  You do not know if the Lord will come to visit you in the night somewhere.  Once a man is touched by the Lord of Life he begins to grow into the promised man of God.

  1. There is a radical difference between the preaching of man and the power of Jesus’ touch.  We speak all manner of words, do deeds abundantly, and hold the sinner close.  In the end, however, our work is useless if the Lord does not touch them.
  2. At the same time, we might give up on a man.  We may come to assume he will never respond.  All the while the Lord is causing a moment to approach where He will transform what we could not.  This is a ponderous and often over looked thought.
  3. Some teach others by a “hands-on” approach.  They live among the people and display the Gospel every moment of every day.   Some teach others by words.  The words are cast out to spread that same Gospel.
    1. What is the effect of the “hands-on” approach?
    2. What is the effect of the propagation approach?
    3. One will be gifted to remain among people.  The other will likely hold an aversion to gatherings.  One is made to display a living example.  The other is made to provide a written account.
    4. Neither is exempt from living out the Gospel in their life.  Both are responsible to do what the word says.
    5. The effectiveness of the first is more easily, and likely to be, seen in a life time.   The effectiveness of the latter may not be apparent in the life time of the propagator.  Yet both will glorify the Lord on the day of Judgment.  “My word will not return to me void. . . “

i.      There is the written word.  And there is the living word.  Neither can be accomplished with effectiveness without the Lord Jesus’ strength and direction.

  1. You can speak and not know the Lord.  What good is that?
  2. You can act and not know the Lord.   What good is that?
  3. Lord, I thank You for the cool of the evening.  But more than the pleasantness of the night, I thank You for the prosperity of the day.  Pleasing is the flavor of a day well spent.  The farmer washes up after the seed is planted.  The dinner is laid out when the day has been spent toward future dinners.  You have blessed both the morning and the evening with Your wisdom, Holiness, Power, and Truth.

 

The Lord is the source of all life that is worth living.  Without Him no man accomplishes more than a sneeze into the wind.  By His Grace all eternity moves forward.   And we who hope in Your Promise, look forward with prying eyes to see what lay in store.  You are pleased, O’ Lord, to keep your gifts hidden from those who serve now in this place of testing.  We are kept at bay while both You and we prove Your Love.   It is a certain comfort to know that your perfect promise is held in perfect hands.  You did not require us to walk this world in full dress.  They who hate You would surely rip at our glory.  You hold the glory You promise in a place remote and Glorious.  Wisdom is Yours!

 

You are God!  May Your Holy will be done forever.  In Jesus’ Holy Name we pray.  Amen.

 

The Faint Rumblings.


Another day, another lightning storm. This was...

Image via Wikipedia

The world around us is beginning to crash to the ground.  Listen to the sound of destruction.  It comes from the hills.  Like distant thunder we hear the faint rumble of hopelessness and death.  Listen!  Be still and listen with all your heart.  The approach is in progress.  It is an approaching “storm of wickedness”.

God has promised that man will endure a horrible time in the last days.  His wrath has been held back for thousands of years.  He has been patient and loving for everyone who will call upon Him.  And He has shown mercy on the godless and ungodly as they mark out their days in rebellion and cursings toward the Holy One of Israel.

But listen.  Can’t you hear that faint rumble?  It is the collapse of man’s ability to fend off chaos.  Man has determined that he is able to bring about peace on this world.  How can there be peace in a world of limited resources?  How can there be peace anywhere without the Living God directing the ways of man? 

They have thrown His Holy Commands aside in favor of pleasure and pride.  Now they begin to pay the price.  And as the Day comes closer, the price will increase.  God will be glorified.  And rebels will be subjected to humiliation, defeat, fear, and destruction.  Listen to the faint rumble. 

By His Grace.

An Unsettling Dream.


"Landscape with the Dream of Jacob"

Image via Wikipedia

Dreams are always of interest to everyone.  Sometimes they mean something specific.  Most of the time it’s wise to consider what we had to eat before we went to bed.

I had a dream just before I woke this morning that has rattled my world.  Yet, in pondering its potential, I have come to a Christian conclusion. 

In the dream I did something.  I don’t know what I did.  But the effects of my action (or non-action) was too much for those who know me to bear.  I heard one person I know say, “That’s it!  I can’t take any more.”  And that person turned and walked away.  The others who knew me followed suit because the first person was more dear to them than I.  Evidently, I had one more obligation to accomplish near one of those who knew me.  When I was finished I asked that last person to help me dump remaining items into a sack.  After some painful deliberation on the part of the last person, he held the sack open for me and left.  I walked out the door into the street and felt the finality cover me like a tidal wave. 

When I woke, I wondered if this were a warning of something to come.  I thought about the Lord’s Right to be Lord God.  That nothing we desire is really ours to own.  In all things God’s will is to be accomplished.  And I accept anything that comes from His hand.  He is God!

Sadness resounds in my soul like a great bell on a hill.  I don’t know if this dream will come to pass.  But it’s caused me to ready myself for anything.  I give up willingly.  In fact, I place myself before Him with eager willingness.  I want God’s will to be accomplished in me regardless the outcome or my perception.

In considering the dream and the possibility that it is a warning of something to come, I am brought to another item of interest.  Many would fight to hold on to their place in this world.  But the servant of God should not be like that.  It is our duty under the Blood of His Son, that we should walk without blaming others for our situations.  I thought of Stephen, in the book of Acts.  He had done nothing wrong.  But the Jews were determined to kill him for his testimony for the Lord.  While they were stoning him he asked the Lord to forgive them, for they did not know what they were doing.  God was accomplishing something wonderful with every rock that impacted his body.  After he said this his soul was taken from his body.  With this in mind I post the following as a testimony to the Glory of God:

Father, You are Lord and God of absolutely everything in heaven and in earth.  Time is yours.  And in this place You have required us to endure testings of various kinds.  It is to You alone that man and angels will answer.  And You demand that Your people walk in obedience to Your Glorious will.  I ask You, Father, to hold nothing against anyone on my behalf.  Everything I have or own is not mine.  They can take nothing from me.  For I give it to You.  Even my desire to be loved is Yours to hold and do with as You see fit.  You are God!  By the Beautiful Name of Your Son Jesus I present this prayer.

By His Grace.

To Judge or Assess?


Scale_of_justice

Image by TaranRampersad via Flickr

I witnessed an old man having trouble with the lock on the back of his trailer.  Now, I’d jump out and help.  But only one key opens the lock.  And only one set of fingers at a time can turn that key.  And what advice can I possibly give to help? “Try to turn it this way.”  Yeah.

I was waiting behind him to pull into my door.  And there was nothing more to do but sit and watch.  After a while he gave up and waddled back to my truck.  Was he going to ask for help?  Maybe he thought I carried a bolt cutter or an oxy acetylene torch.  Nah, that’s not reasonable to expect.

He got near my truck and I jumped out to meet him.  He began to talk and my soul was startled.  Anger and cursing flowed from his mouth like a river of fast moving mud.  I didn’t expect that.  He didn’t look like someone who carried that kind of heart.  But there’s not much a person can tell about another by simply looking at them.

This experience brings me to ponder “judging”.  We are instructed (commanded actually) not to judge.  But what would this world be like if we didn’t access our fellow humans? How would we sort out danger or friendly?  Would we allow the enemies of truth to come live in our house?  Perhaps, but not without making some measure of prevention.  So what is this judging thing?

Judging, as we’re commanded to refrain from, is more likely having to do with settling on a conviction that someone is a certain way and  without redemption.  Perhaps it’s like being a judge at a trial and rendering a sentence on the person in question.  I can see how this would be a source of major damage.  There would be no hope of that person ever overcoming their history.  And such judging would preclude any possibility of change.  So they would be locked out of our sphere of acceptance and hope.

Judging, as is necessary, might be more like assessment.  We consider the other person according to what knowledge of truth we contain.  And we allow for learning on both parts.  I allow myself room to learn something more about the person, while I continue to consider that person with reserved guard.  And I allow that other person room toward possible clarification of their personality.

Refrain from condemning others to the life they now present to you.  But be careful not to allow enemies to get too close.  A curious mix of understanding is needed here.  But doesn’t this just show how small and unwise we really are?  Who can know what is right without the Lord giving understanding?  How many people have been killed, through the ages, because others judged them unfit.  Even the righteous have become victim of this kind of judging.

In the end, perhaps it would be better to identify two words we can use.  We are allowed to access a person’s intend and tendencies.  And do so with understanding that we might well be wrong.  We’re allowed to protect what is precious in our world.   But we’re commanded not to condemn others before we have all the facts.  And even when all the “facts” are presented, can we truly judge them on an eternal scale?   “Be wise as serpents and harmless as doves.”

And what would have happened if Jesus had met the “man of the tombs” and simply turned around and left?  After all, wasn’t the entire village afraid of this man?  Wasn’t he a horrible person?  But look what happened when Jesus drove the evil spirits out of him.  The villagers found that man “in his right mind and sitting at the feet of Jesus”.  (Mark 5: 1-10)  See also:  http://timglass.wordpress.com/2008/10/04/a-man-from-the-tombs-mark-51-10/

At the same time I’m put in remembrance of the 7 sons of sceva:

13 “Some Jews who went around driving out evil spirits tried to invoke the name of the Lord Jesus over those who were demon-possessed. They would say, “In the name of the Jesus whom Paul preaches, I command you to come out.” 14 Seven sons of Sceva, a Jewish chief priest, were doing this. 15 One day the evil spirit answered them, “Jesus I know, and Paul I know about, but who are you?” 16 Then the man who had the evil spirit jumped on them and overpowered them all. He gave them such a beating that they ran out of the house naked and bleeding. ”  (Acts 9)

Again, we are told to be wise as serpents and harmless as doves.

By His Grace.